Amherst - As the New England states continue to struggle with serious budget shortfalls, policymakers face pressure to turn to increased taxes to replenish the coffers. Opponents raise the specter of families fleeing for lower-tax states in response. But in this new study from Jeffrey Thompson of thePolitical Economy Research Instituteat the University of Massachusetts, that concern is laid to rest. InThe Impact of Taxes on Migration in New England, Thompson analyzes new data, and finds that the impact of taxes on cross-state migration is very weak. Other factors—primarily employment and family concerns—provide the main reasons that families move. And family ties, comfort with their community, jobs, the costs of moving, and valuing the public services in their state are why families stay put, regardless of their state's tax rates.
DelMarVa's Premier Source for News, Opinion, Analysis, and Human Interest Contact Publisher Joe Albero at alberobutzo@wmconnect.com or 410-430-5349
Attention
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Study: Employment, Not Taxes, Drives Families’ Decisions To Move Across State Lines
If states raise taxes, do residents flee for other states? Policymakers in New England and around the country face this question any time they consider new sources of revenue. In new research from the Political Economy Research Institute at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Jeffrey Thompson adds new analysis to the body of research laying this concern to rest. In The Impact of Taxes on Migration in New England , Thompson analyzes new data, and finds that the impact of taxes on cross-state migration is very weak. Other factors—primarily employment and family concerns—provide the main reasons that families move.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
Truth-out can try to spin this any way they want, but it's still wrong.
We're looking at moving out of Maryland, and it isn't for the reasons they state.
It's because of the TAXES and FEES. Plain and simple.
I too, say they're wrong! I lived in Maryland and I moved to Delaware because of taxes and fees too!
I live in Delaware and work in Maryland.
Maryland is still screwing me though with their Non-resident taxing rules!
If I could do this same job in Delaware, for the same employer, I would!
Post a Comment